{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=United+Daughters+of+the+Confederacy.+Black+Horse%0A+++++++++Chapter+%28Warrenton%2C+Va.%29.","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=United+Daughters+of+the+Confederacy.+Black+Horse%0A+++++++++Chapter+%28Warrenton%2C+Va.%29.\u0026page=1"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":1,"next_page":null,"prev_page":null,"total_pages":1,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":0,"total_count":1,"first_page?":true,"last_page?":true}},"data":[{"id":"vihi_vih00011","type":"collection","attributes":{"title":"Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00011#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Chiefly correspondence and other materials of Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) and his wife Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923). R. T. Scott was a lawyer in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax counties, a member of the constitutional convention of 1867 and the Virginia General Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as attorney-general of Virginia from 1889 to 1897. At the beginning of the Civil War he organized a company of infantry and served as captain of Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment, C.S.A., until he was appointed to the staff of General George Edward Pickett. His materials include extensive correspondence, chiefly with his wife, both before and during the Civil War, discussing family and personal matters, legal education, admittance to the bar and practice of law, and the impending conflict. War-time correspondence describes the secession convention of 1861, general camp life, duties as quartermaster, and Union activities in Fauquier County and near Leesburg, Va. Also included are legal records and some records for Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment. Records of Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott include general correspondence, accounts, land records, miscellany, and materials from her term as president of the Black Horse Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, at Warrenton, Va.","label":"Abstract Or Scope"}},"breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00011#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"id":"vihi_vih00011","ead_ssi":"vihi_vih00011","_root_":"vihi_vih00011","_nest_parent_":"vihi_vih00011","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/vhs/vih00011.xml","title_ssm":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"title_tesim":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss1 K2694 c FA2"],"text":["Mss1 K2694 c FA2","Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979","Confederate States of America. Army -- Military\n         life.","Confederate States of America. Army. Virginia\n         Infantry Regiment, 8th. Company K.","Keith family..","Lawyers -- Virginia -- Warrenton -- History --\n         19th century.","Scott family.","Scott, Fanny Scott Carter, 1838-1923.","Scott, Robert Taylor, 1834-1897.","Taylor family.","United Daughters of the Confederacy. Black Horse\n         Chapter (Warrenton, Va.).","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Virginia -- Politics and government -- 19th\n         century.","Warrenton (Va.) -- History.","Women -- Societies and clubs.","1,025 (ca.) items in 14 manuscript\n         boxes.","The papers of the Keith family is arranged into 25 series\n         by individual and further subdivided by material type where\n         necessary.","This collection of Keith family papers consists of\n         materials from five generations of Keith, Scott and Carter\n         family members from Warrenton and surrounding Fauquier County.\n         Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) was a lawyer in Warrenton and\n         Prince William and Fairfax counties, a member of the\n         constitutional convention of 1867 and the Virginia General\n         Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as attorney-general of\n         Virginia from 1889 to 1897. His wife, Fanny Scott (Carter)\n         Scott (1838-1923), served as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, at Warrenton,\n         Va.","Also represented in the collection are Robert I. Taylor\n         (1777?-1840), Mary Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?),\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott (1788-1862), Isham Keith\n         (1801-1863), Juliet (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), Anne Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862),\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886), Margaret Gordon\n         (Scott) Lee (1817-1866), Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880),\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), James\n         Keith (1839-1918), John Scott (1845-1882), Sophia DeButts\n         (Carter) Carter (1841-1928), Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928),\n         Mary Welby (Scott) Keith (1870-1958), Alice Dixon (Payne) Carr\n         (1870-1966), Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944), Thomas\n         Randolph Keith (b. 1872), and John Augustine Chilton Keith (b.\n         1907).","Robert I. Taylor (1777?-1840) was a prominent Alexandria\n         lawyer and president of the town's common council. His papers\n         contain several items of correspondence, estate materials and\n         materials concerning the guardianship of Richmond Marshall\n         Scott (b. 1829) by William Haywood Foote (1781?-1846),\n         executor of Richard Marshall Scott (d. 1833). The latter\n         includes a commonplace book kept by Foote. Taylor's wife, Mary\n         Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?) also has several letters\n         in the collection, as does Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott\n         (1788-1862), wife of Judge John Scott (1781-1850).","Correspondence of Isham Keith (1801-1863), his wife, Juliet\n         (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), and her sister, Ann Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), is included herein. Isham\n         Keith was an influential Warrenton business man. Among his\n         correspondence is a letter to Judge John Scott and several\n         letters from a brother in Georgia, John Marshall Keith\n         (1788-1841), discussing the sale of a slave and state and\n         national politics.","Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862), son of Judge John Scott and\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott, was recognized as one of\n         the state's leading Whigs in the years immediately prior to\n         the Civil War. His papers consist of correspondence, mostly\n         with his son, Robert Taylor Scott, and materials concerning\n         Sarah Scott (Ashton) Glassell. Robert Eden Scott's third wife,\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886) has several items\n         of correspondence in the collection, as does his sister,\n         Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (1817-1866). There is also a box\n         of estate materials for Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (box 2),\n         which contains accounts, vouchers, correspondence and reports\n         to the Fauquier County Court.","Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880) was a major in the 8th\n         Virginia Infantry during the Civil War. In 1879 he received an\n         appointment to the U. S. custom house in Panama and his\n         correspondence is largely with his son-in-law, Robert Taylor\n         Scott, during this period. One letter, dated 10 March 1880,\n         discusses national politics and American policies toward\n         Panama; however, much of his correspondence concerns a large\n         debt which was administered by RTS (see below). Carter's wife,\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), also has several\n         letters in the collection.","The Keith papers contain some correspondence of Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith,\n         and his wife Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), as\n         sell as a scrapbook belonging to her. A letter to Mrs. Keith\n         from Armistead Churchill Gordon (1855-1931) discusses family\n         history. James Keith, circuit judge and president of the\n         Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals from 1895 to 1916, was\n         another son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith. His\n         letters are largely with family members and deal with family\n         history. There is also an autograph album belonging to Judge\n         Keith from the 1859-1860 session as the University of\n         Virginia.","The major figure in the Keith family papers is Robert\n         Taylor Scott (1834-1897), attorney-general of Virginia from\n         1889 to 1897. Sone of Robert Eden Scott and Elizabeth (Taylor)\n         Scott, he was born on 10 March 1834 at Warrenton, Va. He\n         graduated from the University of Virginia in 1854 and was\n         admitted to the Warrenton bar in 1857. At the outbreak if the\n         Civil War, Scott organized a company of infantry which was\n         mustered into service as Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         under Colonel Eppa Hunton. RTS served as its captain until the\n         fall of 8162, when was appointed to the staff of General\n         George Edward Pickett as division quartermaster. He remained\n         on Pickett's staff until the end of the war.","Robert Taylor Scott was a member of the constitutional\n         convention of 1867 and the Virginia General Assembly of\n         1881-1882, representing Fauquier and Loudoun counties. He was\n         elected attorney-general in 1889 and re-elected four years\n         later.","Materials pertaining to Robert Taylor Scott include\n         correspondence, CSA materials, legal files, financial records,\n         a few items pertaining to his political career, copies of\n         speeches, clippings, miscellany and obituaries. Most of the\n         correspondence is between Scott and his wife, Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott, during the Civil War and the years immediately\n         before. These letters deal primarily with personal and family\n         matters, yet many contain information valuable to the\n         historical researcher as well. Much of the pre-war\n         correspondence concerns Scott's law activities; his education\n         and apprenticeship under his father, admittance to the bar,\n         and practice in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax\n         counties. Of particular interest are the letter of 31 December\n         1856, discussing a slave insurrection in Prince William\n         County; letter of 12 July 1860, concerning a runaway slave;\n         and letter of 3 January 1861, concerning the purchase or hire\n         of slaves. Other letters during this period deal with politics\n         and the impending conflict. The Civil War correspondence, from\n         1861 through November 1864, describes the secession convention\n         of 1861 (at which RTS was an observer and his father, RES, a\n         delegate), general camp life, Scott's duties as quartermaster,\n         Union activities in Fauquier and campaigns in which Scott was\n         involved. Scott's letters from Camp Johnston, near Leesburg,\n         dated 20 September 1861 to 1 October 1861 and from camp near\n         Centreville, dated 1 January 1862 to 5 March 1862, provide an\n         especially good picture of such facets of camp life as:\n         quarters and provisions, leaves and furloughs, religious\n         activities, health, morale and discipline. Other selected\n         letters are indexed following this description.","Scott's legal records include several miscellaneous files,\n         a copy of a partnership agreement with James Vass Brooke\n         (1824-1898) and records concerning his role as fiduciary for\n         Maria Louisa (Nelson) Carter, William Wesley Phillips,\n         Lawrence Ashton and John Quincy Marr. Marr was the first\n         Confederate soldier to be killed during the Civil War and\n         Robert Taylor Scott was administrator for his estate. Scott's\n         CSA service file contains orders, muster roles and\n         quartermaster's pay records for Company K, 8th Virginia\n         Regiment. Among Scott's financial records are materials\n         concerning the debt of Richard Henry Carter.","Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923) was the wife of\n         Robert Taylor Scott and the daughter of Richard Henry Carter\n         and Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter. Her papers include general\n         correspondence, accounts, land records, miscellany and\n         materials from her term as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Warrenton, Va.\n         Her correspondence with John Augustine Chilton Keith\n         (1870-1915) relates primarily to the estate of Robert Taylor\n         Scott and includes two letters from John Singleton Mosby\n         (1833-1916) concerning restitution due RTS for tobacco\n         confiscated by the Union army in 1865. Land records mainly\n         concern tracts in Warrenton. Materials concerning Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott's presidency of the UDC chapter include\n         correspondence, copies of applications containing service\n         records and several biographical sketches of Robert Randolph,\n         one of the captains of the Black Horse Cavalry during the\n         Civil War.","John Scott (1845-1882), son of Robert Eden Scott and Ann\n         (Morson) Scott, was a lawyer in Baltimore, Maryland, and\n         California and items pertaining to him include diplomas,\n         certificates, a catalog of his law library and materials\n         concerning his death in California. There are also\n         miscellaneous materials for Sophia DeButts (Carter) Carter\n         (1841-1928), sister of Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott.","Robert Taylor Scott and Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott had\n         three children who lived to adulthood and two are represented\n         herein. Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928) was a lawyer and\n         judge in Richmond, VA. A University of Virginia graduate, he\n         worked in Norfolk for the Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia Air\n         Lines and the Exchange Bank of Virginia before coming to\n         Richmond in 1885 as Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue. He\n         entered the attorney-general's office in 1889 when his father\n         was elected to that post. He was appointed attorney-general in\n         1897 to serve out the remainder of his father's term and in\n         1904 was appointed by the General Assembly judge of the 10th\n         judicial circuit.","Most of the correspondence of Richard Carter Scott was\n         written to his father during his days in Norfolk and these\n         letters are arranged with his father's correspondence. Another\n         correspondent of RCS is William Wallace Scott (1845-1929),\n         author, state law librarian and secretary to the State\n         Democratic Committee from 1883-1892. Included in the\n         miscellaneous material is Richard Carter Scott's account of\n         the 1910 Episcopal Church Convention in Cincinnati.","Mary Welby (Scott) Keith's (1870-1958) materials include\n         correspondence primarily with her husband, John Augustine\n         Chilton Keith, certificates from the Virginia Female Institute\n         (Staunton, Va.), signed by Mrs. J. E. B. Stuart, and a\n         scrapbook. There are also two scrapbooks belonging to Alice\n         Dixon (Payne) Carr (1870-19676), kept in Warrenton.","Two children of Isham Keith and Sarah Agnes (Blackwell)\n         Keith, Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944) and Thomas Randolph\n         Keith (1872- ), are prominent in the collection. Materials\n         pertaining to Katherine Isham Keith include correspondence, a\n         scrapbook containing two letters from John Singleton Mosby and\n         one from James Keith, and genealogical materials. Harry Flood\n         Byrd (1887-1966), George Campbell Peery (1873-1952) and Robert\n         Walton Moore (1859-1941) are all correspondents. Thomas\n         Randolph Keith's correspondence primarily concerns\n         genealogy.","John Augustine Chilton Keith (b. 1907), sone of John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith and Mary Welby (Scott) Keith has\n         several items of correspondence in the collection. Among these\n         materials is a lengthy study of \"Gordonsdale,\" Fauquier\n         County, written by Reginald J. Vickers. The last box (14)\n         contains miscellaneous family materials, clippings,\n         genealogical notes on the Keith and Scott families and\n         information on Stuyvesant School, Warrenton, Va. Included in\n         the materials on Stuyvesant School is an essay written by John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith (1907- ), about the school and its\n         founder, Edwin Burrus King (1876-1950).","Chiefly correspondence and other\n         materials of Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) and his wife\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923). R. T. Scott was a\n         lawyer in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax counties, a\n         member of the constitutional convention of 1867 and the\n         Virginia General Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as\n         attorney-general of Virginia from 1889 to 1897. At the\n         beginning of the Civil War he organized a company of infantry\n         and served as captain of Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         C.S.A., until he was appointed to the staff of General George\n         Edward Pickett. His materials include extensive\n         correspondence, chiefly with his wife, both before and during\n         the Civil War, discussing family and personal matters, legal\n         education, admittance to the bar and practice of law, and the\n         impending conflict. War-time correspondence describes the\n         secession convention of 1861, general camp life, duties as\n         quartermaster, and Union activities in Fauquier County and\n         near Leesburg, Va. Also included are legal records and some\n         records for Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment. Records of\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott include general correspondence,\n         accounts, land records, miscellany, and materials from her\n         term as president of the Black Horse Chapter, United Daughters\n         of the Confederacy, at Warrenton, Va.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss1 K2694 c FA2"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"collection_title_tesim":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"collection_ssim":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"repository_ssm":["Virginia Historical Society"],"repository_ssim":["Virginia Historical Society"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift of Mrs. Fanny K. Day, Edison, N.J., Judge James\n            Keith, Fairfax, Va., John A. C. Keith, Fairfax, Va., and\n            Vice-Admiral R. Taylor Scott Keith, Coronado, Calif., 15\n            May 1985."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Confederate States of America. Army -- Military\n         life.","Confederate States of America. Army. Virginia\n         Infantry Regiment, 8th. Company K.","Keith family..","Lawyers -- Virginia -- Warrenton -- History --\n         19th century.","Scott family.","Scott, Fanny Scott Carter, 1838-1923.","Scott, Robert Taylor, 1834-1897.","Taylor family.","United Daughters of the Confederacy. Black Horse\n         Chapter (Warrenton, Va.).","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Virginia -- Politics and government -- 19th\n         century.","Warrenton (Va.) -- History.","Women -- Societies and clubs."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Confederate States of America. Army -- Military\n         life.","Confederate States of America. Army. Virginia\n         Infantry Regiment, 8th. Company K.","Keith family..","Lawyers -- Virginia -- Warrenton -- History --\n         19th century.","Scott family.","Scott, Fanny Scott Carter, 1838-1923.","Scott, Robert Taylor, 1834-1897.","Taylor family.","United Daughters of the Confederacy. Black Horse\n         Chapter (Warrenton, Va.).","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Virginia -- Politics and government -- 19th\n         century.","Warrenton (Va.) -- History.","Women -- Societies and clubs."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["1,025 (ca.) items in 14 manuscript\n         boxes."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe papers of the Keith family is arranged into 25 series\n         by individual and further subdivided by material type where\n         necessary.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The papers of the Keith family is arranged into 25 series\n         by individual and further subdivided by material type where\n         necessary."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection of Keith family papers consists of\n         materials from five generations of Keith, Scott and Carter\n         family members from Warrenton and surrounding Fauquier County.\n         Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) was a lawyer in Warrenton and\n         Prince William and Fairfax counties, a member of the\n         constitutional convention of 1867 and the Virginia General\n         Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as attorney-general of\n         Virginia from 1889 to 1897. His wife, Fanny Scott (Carter)\n         Scott (1838-1923), served as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, at Warrenton,\n         Va.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso represented in the collection are Robert I. Taylor\n         (1777?-1840), Mary Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?),\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott (1788-1862), Isham Keith\n         (1801-1863), Juliet (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), Anne Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862),\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886), Margaret Gordon\n         (Scott) Lee (1817-1866), Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880),\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), James\n         Keith (1839-1918), John Scott (1845-1882), Sophia DeButts\n         (Carter) Carter (1841-1928), Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928),\n         Mary Welby (Scott) Keith (1870-1958), Alice Dixon (Payne) Carr\n         (1870-1966), Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944), Thomas\n         Randolph Keith (b. 1872), and John Augustine Chilton Keith (b.\n         1907).\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["This collection of Keith family papers consists of\n         materials from five generations of Keith, Scott and Carter\n         family members from Warrenton and surrounding Fauquier County.\n         Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) was a lawyer in Warrenton and\n         Prince William and Fairfax counties, a member of the\n         constitutional convention of 1867 and the Virginia General\n         Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as attorney-general of\n         Virginia from 1889 to 1897. His wife, Fanny Scott (Carter)\n         Scott (1838-1923), served as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, at Warrenton,\n         Va.","Also represented in the collection are Robert I. Taylor\n         (1777?-1840), Mary Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?),\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott (1788-1862), Isham Keith\n         (1801-1863), Juliet (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), Anne Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862),\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886), Margaret Gordon\n         (Scott) Lee (1817-1866), Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880),\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), James\n         Keith (1839-1918), John Scott (1845-1882), Sophia DeButts\n         (Carter) Carter (1841-1928), Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928),\n         Mary Welby (Scott) Keith (1870-1958), Alice Dixon (Payne) Carr\n         (1870-1966), Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944), Thomas\n         Randolph Keith (b. 1872), and John Augustine Chilton Keith (b.\n         1907)."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eRobert I. Taylor (1777?-1840) was a prominent Alexandria\n         lawyer and president of the town's common council. His papers\n         contain several items of correspondence, estate materials and\n         materials concerning the guardianship of Richmond Marshall\n         Scott (b. 1829) by William Haywood Foote (1781?-1846),\n         executor of Richard Marshall Scott (d. 1833). The latter\n         includes a commonplace book kept by Foote. Taylor's wife, Mary\n         Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?) also has several letters\n         in the collection, as does Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott\n         (1788-1862), wife of Judge John Scott (1781-1850).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence of Isham Keith (1801-1863), his wife, Juliet\n         (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), and her sister, Ann Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), is included herein. Isham\n         Keith was an influential Warrenton business man. Among his\n         correspondence is a letter to Judge John Scott and several\n         letters from a brother in Georgia, John Marshall Keith\n         (1788-1841), discussing the sale of a slave and state and\n         national politics.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Eden Scott (1808-1862), son of Judge John Scott and\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott, was recognized as one of\n         the state's leading Whigs in the years immediately prior to\n         the Civil War. His papers consist of correspondence, mostly\n         with his son, Robert Taylor Scott, and materials concerning\n         Sarah Scott (Ashton) Glassell. Robert Eden Scott's third wife,\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886) has several items\n         of correspondence in the collection, as does his sister,\n         Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (1817-1866). There is also a box\n         of estate materials for Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (box 2),\n         which contains accounts, vouchers, correspondence and reports\n         to the Fauquier County Court.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRichard Henry Carter (1817-1880) was a major in the 8th\n         Virginia Infantry during the Civil War. In 1879 he received an\n         appointment to the U. S. custom house in Panama and his\n         correspondence is largely with his son-in-law, Robert Taylor\n         Scott, during this period. One letter, dated 10 March 1880,\n         discusses national politics and American policies toward\n         Panama; however, much of his correspondence concerns a large\n         debt which was administered by RTS (see below). Carter's wife,\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), also has several\n         letters in the collection.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Keith papers contain some correspondence of Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith,\n         and his wife Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), as\n         sell as a scrapbook belonging to her. A letter to Mrs. Keith\n         from Armistead Churchill Gordon (1855-1931) discusses family\n         history. James Keith, circuit judge and president of the\n         Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals from 1895 to 1916, was\n         another son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith. His\n         letters are largely with family members and deal with family\n         history. There is also an autograph album belonging to Judge\n         Keith from the 1859-1860 session as the University of\n         Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe major figure in the Keith family papers is Robert\n         Taylor Scott (1834-1897), attorney-general of Virginia from\n         1889 to 1897. Sone of Robert Eden Scott and Elizabeth (Taylor)\n         Scott, he was born on 10 March 1834 at Warrenton, Va. He\n         graduated from the University of Virginia in 1854 and was\n         admitted to the Warrenton bar in 1857. At the outbreak if the\n         Civil War, Scott organized a company of infantry which was\n         mustered into service as Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         under Colonel Eppa Hunton. RTS served as its captain until the\n         fall of 8162, when was appointed to the staff of General\n         George Edward Pickett as division quartermaster. He remained\n         on Pickett's staff until the end of the war.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Taylor Scott was a member of the constitutional\n         convention of 1867 and the Virginia General Assembly of\n         1881-1882, representing Fauquier and Loudoun counties. He was\n         elected attorney-general in 1889 and re-elected four years\n         later.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials pertaining to Robert Taylor Scott include\n         correspondence, CSA materials, legal files, financial records,\n         a few items pertaining to his political career, copies of\n         speeches, clippings, miscellany and obituaries. Most of the\n         correspondence is between Scott and his wife, Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott, during the Civil War and the years immediately\n         before. These letters deal primarily with personal and family\n         matters, yet many contain information valuable to the\n         historical researcher as well. Much of the pre-war\n         correspondence concerns Scott's law activities; his education\n         and apprenticeship under his father, admittance to the bar,\n         and practice in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax\n         counties. Of particular interest are the letter of 31 December\n         1856, discussing a slave insurrection in Prince William\n         County; letter of 12 July 1860, concerning a runaway slave;\n         and letter of 3 January 1861, concerning the purchase or hire\n         of slaves. Other letters during this period deal with politics\n         and the impending conflict. The Civil War correspondence, from\n         1861 through November 1864, describes the secession convention\n         of 1861 (at which RTS was an observer and his father, RES, a\n         delegate), general camp life, Scott's duties as quartermaster,\n         Union activities in Fauquier and campaigns in which Scott was\n         involved. Scott's letters from Camp Johnston, near Leesburg,\n         dated 20 September 1861 to 1 October 1861 and from camp near\n         Centreville, dated 1 January 1862 to 5 March 1862, provide an\n         especially good picture of such facets of camp life as:\n         quarters and provisions, leaves and furloughs, religious\n         activities, health, morale and discipline. Other selected\n         letters are indexed following this description.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScott's legal records include several miscellaneous files,\n         a copy of a partnership agreement with James Vass Brooke\n         (1824-1898) and records concerning his role as fiduciary for\n         Maria Louisa (Nelson) Carter, William Wesley Phillips,\n         Lawrence Ashton and John Quincy Marr. Marr was the first\n         Confederate soldier to be killed during the Civil War and\n         Robert Taylor Scott was administrator for his estate. Scott's\n         CSA service file contains orders, muster roles and\n         quartermaster's pay records for Company K, 8th Virginia\n         Regiment. Among Scott's financial records are materials\n         concerning the debt of Richard Henry Carter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923) was the wife of\n         Robert Taylor Scott and the daughter of Richard Henry Carter\n         and Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter. Her papers include general\n         correspondence, accounts, land records, miscellany and\n         materials from her term as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Warrenton, Va.\n         Her correspondence with John Augustine Chilton Keith\n         (1870-1915) relates primarily to the estate of Robert Taylor\n         Scott and includes two letters from John Singleton Mosby\n         (1833-1916) concerning restitution due RTS for tobacco\n         confiscated by the Union army in 1865. Land records mainly\n         concern tracts in Warrenton. Materials concerning Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott's presidency of the UDC chapter include\n         correspondence, copies of applications containing service\n         records and several biographical sketches of Robert Randolph,\n         one of the captains of the Black Horse Cavalry during the\n         Civil War.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Scott (1845-1882), son of Robert Eden Scott and Ann\n         (Morson) Scott, was a lawyer in Baltimore, Maryland, and\n         California and items pertaining to him include diplomas,\n         certificates, a catalog of his law library and materials\n         concerning his death in California. There are also\n         miscellaneous materials for Sophia DeButts (Carter) Carter\n         (1841-1928), sister of Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Taylor Scott and Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott had\n         three children who lived to adulthood and two are represented\n         herein. Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928) was a lawyer and\n         judge in Richmond, VA. A University of Virginia graduate, he\n         worked in Norfolk for the Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia Air\n         Lines and the Exchange Bank of Virginia before coming to\n         Richmond in 1885 as Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue. He\n         entered the attorney-general's office in 1889 when his father\n         was elected to that post. He was appointed attorney-general in\n         1897 to serve out the remainder of his father's term and in\n         1904 was appointed by the General Assembly judge of the 10th\n         judicial circuit.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence of Richard Carter Scott was\n         written to his father during his days in Norfolk and these\n         letters are arranged with his father's correspondence. Another\n         correspondent of RCS is William Wallace Scott (1845-1929),\n         author, state law librarian and secretary to the State\n         Democratic Committee from 1883-1892. Included in the\n         miscellaneous material is Richard Carter Scott's account of\n         the 1910 Episcopal Church Convention in Cincinnati.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMary Welby (Scott) Keith's (1870-1958) materials include\n         correspondence primarily with her husband, John Augustine\n         Chilton Keith, certificates from the Virginia Female Institute\n         (Staunton, Va.), signed by Mrs. J. E. B. Stuart, and a\n         scrapbook. There are also two scrapbooks belonging to Alice\n         Dixon (Payne) Carr (1870-19676), kept in Warrenton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo children of Isham Keith and Sarah Agnes (Blackwell)\n         Keith, Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944) and Thomas Randolph\n         Keith (1872- ), are prominent in the collection. Materials\n         pertaining to Katherine Isham Keith include correspondence, a\n         scrapbook containing two letters from John Singleton Mosby and\n         one from James Keith, and genealogical materials. Harry Flood\n         Byrd (1887-1966), George Campbell Peery (1873-1952) and Robert\n         Walton Moore (1859-1941) are all correspondents. Thomas\n         Randolph Keith's correspondence primarily concerns\n         genealogy.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Augustine Chilton Keith (b. 1907), sone of John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith and Mary Welby (Scott) Keith has\n         several items of correspondence in the collection. Among these\n         materials is a lengthy study of \"Gordonsdale,\" Fauquier\n         County, written by Reginald J. Vickers. The last box (14)\n         contains miscellaneous family materials, clippings,\n         genealogical notes on the Keith and Scott families and\n         information on Stuyvesant School, Warrenton, Va. Included in\n         the materials on Stuyvesant School is an essay written by John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith (1907- ), about the school and its\n         founder, Edwin Burrus King (1876-1950).\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["Robert I. Taylor (1777?-1840) was a prominent Alexandria\n         lawyer and president of the town's common council. His papers\n         contain several items of correspondence, estate materials and\n         materials concerning the guardianship of Richmond Marshall\n         Scott (b. 1829) by William Haywood Foote (1781?-1846),\n         executor of Richard Marshall Scott (d. 1833). The latter\n         includes a commonplace book kept by Foote. Taylor's wife, Mary\n         Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?) also has several letters\n         in the collection, as does Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott\n         (1788-1862), wife of Judge John Scott (1781-1850).","Correspondence of Isham Keith (1801-1863), his wife, Juliet\n         (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), and her sister, Ann Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), is included herein. Isham\n         Keith was an influential Warrenton business man. Among his\n         correspondence is a letter to Judge John Scott and several\n         letters from a brother in Georgia, John Marshall Keith\n         (1788-1841), discussing the sale of a slave and state and\n         national politics.","Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862), son of Judge John Scott and\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott, was recognized as one of\n         the state's leading Whigs in the years immediately prior to\n         the Civil War. His papers consist of correspondence, mostly\n         with his son, Robert Taylor Scott, and materials concerning\n         Sarah Scott (Ashton) Glassell. Robert Eden Scott's third wife,\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886) has several items\n         of correspondence in the collection, as does his sister,\n         Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (1817-1866). There is also a box\n         of estate materials for Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (box 2),\n         which contains accounts, vouchers, correspondence and reports\n         to the Fauquier County Court.","Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880) was a major in the 8th\n         Virginia Infantry during the Civil War. In 1879 he received an\n         appointment to the U. S. custom house in Panama and his\n         correspondence is largely with his son-in-law, Robert Taylor\n         Scott, during this period. One letter, dated 10 March 1880,\n         discusses national politics and American policies toward\n         Panama; however, much of his correspondence concerns a large\n         debt which was administered by RTS (see below). Carter's wife,\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), also has several\n         letters in the collection.","The Keith papers contain some correspondence of Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith,\n         and his wife Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), as\n         sell as a scrapbook belonging to her. A letter to Mrs. Keith\n         from Armistead Churchill Gordon (1855-1931) discusses family\n         history. James Keith, circuit judge and president of the\n         Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals from 1895 to 1916, was\n         another son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith. His\n         letters are largely with family members and deal with family\n         history. There is also an autograph album belonging to Judge\n         Keith from the 1859-1860 session as the University of\n         Virginia.","The major figure in the Keith family papers is Robert\n         Taylor Scott (1834-1897), attorney-general of Virginia from\n         1889 to 1897. Sone of Robert Eden Scott and Elizabeth (Taylor)\n         Scott, he was born on 10 March 1834 at Warrenton, Va. He\n         graduated from the University of Virginia in 1854 and was\n         admitted to the Warrenton bar in 1857. At the outbreak if the\n         Civil War, Scott organized a company of infantry which was\n         mustered into service as Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         under Colonel Eppa Hunton. RTS served as its captain until the\n         fall of 8162, when was appointed to the staff of General\n         George Edward Pickett as division quartermaster. He remained\n         on Pickett's staff until the end of the war.","Robert Taylor Scott was a member of the constitutional\n         convention of 1867 and the Virginia General Assembly of\n         1881-1882, representing Fauquier and Loudoun counties. He was\n         elected attorney-general in 1889 and re-elected four years\n         later.","Materials pertaining to Robert Taylor Scott include\n         correspondence, CSA materials, legal files, financial records,\n         a few items pertaining to his political career, copies of\n         speeches, clippings, miscellany and obituaries. Most of the\n         correspondence is between Scott and his wife, Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott, during the Civil War and the years immediately\n         before. These letters deal primarily with personal and family\n         matters, yet many contain information valuable to the\n         historical researcher as well. Much of the pre-war\n         correspondence concerns Scott's law activities; his education\n         and apprenticeship under his father, admittance to the bar,\n         and practice in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax\n         counties. Of particular interest are the letter of 31 December\n         1856, discussing a slave insurrection in Prince William\n         County; letter of 12 July 1860, concerning a runaway slave;\n         and letter of 3 January 1861, concerning the purchase or hire\n         of slaves. Other letters during this period deal with politics\n         and the impending conflict. The Civil War correspondence, from\n         1861 through November 1864, describes the secession convention\n         of 1861 (at which RTS was an observer and his father, RES, a\n         delegate), general camp life, Scott's duties as quartermaster,\n         Union activities in Fauquier and campaigns in which Scott was\n         involved. Scott's letters from Camp Johnston, near Leesburg,\n         dated 20 September 1861 to 1 October 1861 and from camp near\n         Centreville, dated 1 January 1862 to 5 March 1862, provide an\n         especially good picture of such facets of camp life as:\n         quarters and provisions, leaves and furloughs, religious\n         activities, health, morale and discipline. Other selected\n         letters are indexed following this description.","Scott's legal records include several miscellaneous files,\n         a copy of a partnership agreement with James Vass Brooke\n         (1824-1898) and records concerning his role as fiduciary for\n         Maria Louisa (Nelson) Carter, William Wesley Phillips,\n         Lawrence Ashton and John Quincy Marr. Marr was the first\n         Confederate soldier to be killed during the Civil War and\n         Robert Taylor Scott was administrator for his estate. Scott's\n         CSA service file contains orders, muster roles and\n         quartermaster's pay records for Company K, 8th Virginia\n         Regiment. Among Scott's financial records are materials\n         concerning the debt of Richard Henry Carter.","Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923) was the wife of\n         Robert Taylor Scott and the daughter of Richard Henry Carter\n         and Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter. Her papers include general\n         correspondence, accounts, land records, miscellany and\n         materials from her term as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Warrenton, Va.\n         Her correspondence with John Augustine Chilton Keith\n         (1870-1915) relates primarily to the estate of Robert Taylor\n         Scott and includes two letters from John Singleton Mosby\n         (1833-1916) concerning restitution due RTS for tobacco\n         confiscated by the Union army in 1865. Land records mainly\n         concern tracts in Warrenton. Materials concerning Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott's presidency of the UDC chapter include\n         correspondence, copies of applications containing service\n         records and several biographical sketches of Robert Randolph,\n         one of the captains of the Black Horse Cavalry during the\n         Civil War.","John Scott (1845-1882), son of Robert Eden Scott and Ann\n         (Morson) Scott, was a lawyer in Baltimore, Maryland, and\n         California and items pertaining to him include diplomas,\n         certificates, a catalog of his law library and materials\n         concerning his death in California. There are also\n         miscellaneous materials for Sophia DeButts (Carter) Carter\n         (1841-1928), sister of Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott.","Robert Taylor Scott and Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott had\n         three children who lived to adulthood and two are represented\n         herein. Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928) was a lawyer and\n         judge in Richmond, VA. A University of Virginia graduate, he\n         worked in Norfolk for the Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia Air\n         Lines and the Exchange Bank of Virginia before coming to\n         Richmond in 1885 as Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue. He\n         entered the attorney-general's office in 1889 when his father\n         was elected to that post. He was appointed attorney-general in\n         1897 to serve out the remainder of his father's term and in\n         1904 was appointed by the General Assembly judge of the 10th\n         judicial circuit.","Most of the correspondence of Richard Carter Scott was\n         written to his father during his days in Norfolk and these\n         letters are arranged with his father's correspondence. Another\n         correspondent of RCS is William Wallace Scott (1845-1929),\n         author, state law librarian and secretary to the State\n         Democratic Committee from 1883-1892. Included in the\n         miscellaneous material is Richard Carter Scott's account of\n         the 1910 Episcopal Church Convention in Cincinnati.","Mary Welby (Scott) Keith's (1870-1958) materials include\n         correspondence primarily with her husband, John Augustine\n         Chilton Keith, certificates from the Virginia Female Institute\n         (Staunton, Va.), signed by Mrs. J. E. B. Stuart, and a\n         scrapbook. There are also two scrapbooks belonging to Alice\n         Dixon (Payne) Carr (1870-19676), kept in Warrenton.","Two children of Isham Keith and Sarah Agnes (Blackwell)\n         Keith, Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944) and Thomas Randolph\n         Keith (1872- ), are prominent in the collection. Materials\n         pertaining to Katherine Isham Keith include correspondence, a\n         scrapbook containing two letters from John Singleton Mosby and\n         one from James Keith, and genealogical materials. Harry Flood\n         Byrd (1887-1966), George Campbell Peery (1873-1952) and Robert\n         Walton Moore (1859-1941) are all correspondents. Thomas\n         Randolph Keith's correspondence primarily concerns\n         genealogy.","John Augustine Chilton Keith (b. 1907), sone of John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith and Mary Welby (Scott) Keith has\n         several items of correspondence in the collection. Among these\n         materials is a lengthy study of \"Gordonsdale,\" Fauquier\n         County, written by Reginald J. Vickers. The last box (14)\n         contains miscellaneous family materials, clippings,\n         genealogical notes on the Keith and Scott families and\n         information on Stuyvesant School, Warrenton, Va. Included in\n         the materials on Stuyvesant School is an essay written by John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith (1907- ), about the school and its\n         founder, Edwin Burrus King (1876-1950)."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eChiefly correspondence and other\n         materials of Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) and his wife\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923). R. T. Scott was a\n         lawyer in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax counties, a\n         member of the constitutional convention of 1867 and the\n         Virginia General Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as\n         attorney-general of Virginia from 1889 to 1897. At the\n         beginning of the Civil War he organized a company of infantry\n         and served as captain of Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         C.S.A., until he was appointed to the staff of General George\n         Edward Pickett. His materials include extensive\n         correspondence, chiefly with his wife, both before and during\n         the Civil War, discussing family and personal matters, legal\n         education, admittance to the bar and practice of law, and the\n         impending conflict. War-time correspondence describes the\n         secession convention of 1861, general camp life, duties as\n         quartermaster, and Union activities in Fauquier County and\n         near Leesburg, Va. Also included are legal records and some\n         records for Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment. Records of\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott include general correspondence,\n         accounts, land records, miscellany, and materials from her\n         term as president of the Black Horse Chapter, United Daughters\n         of the Confederacy, at Warrenton, Va.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Chiefly correspondence and other\n         materials of Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) and his wife\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923). R. T. Scott was a\n         lawyer in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax counties, a\n         member of the constitutional convention of 1867 and the\n         Virginia General Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as\n         attorney-general of Virginia from 1889 to 1897. At the\n         beginning of the Civil War he organized a company of infantry\n         and served as captain of Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         C.S.A., until he was appointed to the staff of General George\n         Edward Pickett. His materials include extensive\n         correspondence, chiefly with his wife, both before and during\n         the Civil War, discussing family and personal matters, legal\n         education, admittance to the bar and practice of law, and the\n         impending conflict. War-time correspondence describes the\n         secession convention of 1861, general camp life, duties as\n         quartermaster, and Union activities in Fauquier County and\n         near Leesburg, Va. Also included are legal records and some\n         records for Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment. Records of\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott include general correspondence,\n         accounts, land records, miscellany, and materials from her\n         term as president of the Black Horse Chapter, United Daughters\n         of the Confederacy, at Warrenton, Va."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":29,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:36:38.951Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vihi_vih00011","ead_ssi":"vihi_vih00011","_root_":"vihi_vih00011","_nest_parent_":"vihi_vih00011","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/vhs/vih00011.xml","title_ssm":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"title_tesim":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["Mss1 K2694 c FA2"],"text":["Mss1 K2694 c FA2","Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979","Confederate States of America. Army -- Military\n         life.","Confederate States of America. Army. Virginia\n         Infantry Regiment, 8th. Company K.","Keith family..","Lawyers -- Virginia -- Warrenton -- History --\n         19th century.","Scott family.","Scott, Fanny Scott Carter, 1838-1923.","Scott, Robert Taylor, 1834-1897.","Taylor family.","United Daughters of the Confederacy. Black Horse\n         Chapter (Warrenton, Va.).","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Virginia -- Politics and government -- 19th\n         century.","Warrenton (Va.) -- History.","Women -- Societies and clubs.","1,025 (ca.) items in 14 manuscript\n         boxes.","The papers of the Keith family is arranged into 25 series\n         by individual and further subdivided by material type where\n         necessary.","This collection of Keith family papers consists of\n         materials from five generations of Keith, Scott and Carter\n         family members from Warrenton and surrounding Fauquier County.\n         Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) was a lawyer in Warrenton and\n         Prince William and Fairfax counties, a member of the\n         constitutional convention of 1867 and the Virginia General\n         Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as attorney-general of\n         Virginia from 1889 to 1897. His wife, Fanny Scott (Carter)\n         Scott (1838-1923), served as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, at Warrenton,\n         Va.","Also represented in the collection are Robert I. Taylor\n         (1777?-1840), Mary Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?),\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott (1788-1862), Isham Keith\n         (1801-1863), Juliet (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), Anne Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862),\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886), Margaret Gordon\n         (Scott) Lee (1817-1866), Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880),\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), James\n         Keith (1839-1918), John Scott (1845-1882), Sophia DeButts\n         (Carter) Carter (1841-1928), Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928),\n         Mary Welby (Scott) Keith (1870-1958), Alice Dixon (Payne) Carr\n         (1870-1966), Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944), Thomas\n         Randolph Keith (b. 1872), and John Augustine Chilton Keith (b.\n         1907).","Robert I. Taylor (1777?-1840) was a prominent Alexandria\n         lawyer and president of the town's common council. His papers\n         contain several items of correspondence, estate materials and\n         materials concerning the guardianship of Richmond Marshall\n         Scott (b. 1829) by William Haywood Foote (1781?-1846),\n         executor of Richard Marshall Scott (d. 1833). The latter\n         includes a commonplace book kept by Foote. Taylor's wife, Mary\n         Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?) also has several letters\n         in the collection, as does Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott\n         (1788-1862), wife of Judge John Scott (1781-1850).","Correspondence of Isham Keith (1801-1863), his wife, Juliet\n         (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), and her sister, Ann Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), is included herein. Isham\n         Keith was an influential Warrenton business man. Among his\n         correspondence is a letter to Judge John Scott and several\n         letters from a brother in Georgia, John Marshall Keith\n         (1788-1841), discussing the sale of a slave and state and\n         national politics.","Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862), son of Judge John Scott and\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott, was recognized as one of\n         the state's leading Whigs in the years immediately prior to\n         the Civil War. His papers consist of correspondence, mostly\n         with his son, Robert Taylor Scott, and materials concerning\n         Sarah Scott (Ashton) Glassell. Robert Eden Scott's third wife,\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886) has several items\n         of correspondence in the collection, as does his sister,\n         Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (1817-1866). There is also a box\n         of estate materials for Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (box 2),\n         which contains accounts, vouchers, correspondence and reports\n         to the Fauquier County Court.","Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880) was a major in the 8th\n         Virginia Infantry during the Civil War. In 1879 he received an\n         appointment to the U. S. custom house in Panama and his\n         correspondence is largely with his son-in-law, Robert Taylor\n         Scott, during this period. One letter, dated 10 March 1880,\n         discusses national politics and American policies toward\n         Panama; however, much of his correspondence concerns a large\n         debt which was administered by RTS (see below). Carter's wife,\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), also has several\n         letters in the collection.","The Keith papers contain some correspondence of Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith,\n         and his wife Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), as\n         sell as a scrapbook belonging to her. A letter to Mrs. Keith\n         from Armistead Churchill Gordon (1855-1931) discusses family\n         history. James Keith, circuit judge and president of the\n         Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals from 1895 to 1916, was\n         another son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith. His\n         letters are largely with family members and deal with family\n         history. There is also an autograph album belonging to Judge\n         Keith from the 1859-1860 session as the University of\n         Virginia.","The major figure in the Keith family papers is Robert\n         Taylor Scott (1834-1897), attorney-general of Virginia from\n         1889 to 1897. Sone of Robert Eden Scott and Elizabeth (Taylor)\n         Scott, he was born on 10 March 1834 at Warrenton, Va. He\n         graduated from the University of Virginia in 1854 and was\n         admitted to the Warrenton bar in 1857. At the outbreak if the\n         Civil War, Scott organized a company of infantry which was\n         mustered into service as Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         under Colonel Eppa Hunton. RTS served as its captain until the\n         fall of 8162, when was appointed to the staff of General\n         George Edward Pickett as division quartermaster. He remained\n         on Pickett's staff until the end of the war.","Robert Taylor Scott was a member of the constitutional\n         convention of 1867 and the Virginia General Assembly of\n         1881-1882, representing Fauquier and Loudoun counties. He was\n         elected attorney-general in 1889 and re-elected four years\n         later.","Materials pertaining to Robert Taylor Scott include\n         correspondence, CSA materials, legal files, financial records,\n         a few items pertaining to his political career, copies of\n         speeches, clippings, miscellany and obituaries. Most of the\n         correspondence is between Scott and his wife, Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott, during the Civil War and the years immediately\n         before. These letters deal primarily with personal and family\n         matters, yet many contain information valuable to the\n         historical researcher as well. Much of the pre-war\n         correspondence concerns Scott's law activities; his education\n         and apprenticeship under his father, admittance to the bar,\n         and practice in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax\n         counties. Of particular interest are the letter of 31 December\n         1856, discussing a slave insurrection in Prince William\n         County; letter of 12 July 1860, concerning a runaway slave;\n         and letter of 3 January 1861, concerning the purchase or hire\n         of slaves. Other letters during this period deal with politics\n         and the impending conflict. The Civil War correspondence, from\n         1861 through November 1864, describes the secession convention\n         of 1861 (at which RTS was an observer and his father, RES, a\n         delegate), general camp life, Scott's duties as quartermaster,\n         Union activities in Fauquier and campaigns in which Scott was\n         involved. Scott's letters from Camp Johnston, near Leesburg,\n         dated 20 September 1861 to 1 October 1861 and from camp near\n         Centreville, dated 1 January 1862 to 5 March 1862, provide an\n         especially good picture of such facets of camp life as:\n         quarters and provisions, leaves and furloughs, religious\n         activities, health, morale and discipline. Other selected\n         letters are indexed following this description.","Scott's legal records include several miscellaneous files,\n         a copy of a partnership agreement with James Vass Brooke\n         (1824-1898) and records concerning his role as fiduciary for\n         Maria Louisa (Nelson) Carter, William Wesley Phillips,\n         Lawrence Ashton and John Quincy Marr. Marr was the first\n         Confederate soldier to be killed during the Civil War and\n         Robert Taylor Scott was administrator for his estate. Scott's\n         CSA service file contains orders, muster roles and\n         quartermaster's pay records for Company K, 8th Virginia\n         Regiment. Among Scott's financial records are materials\n         concerning the debt of Richard Henry Carter.","Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923) was the wife of\n         Robert Taylor Scott and the daughter of Richard Henry Carter\n         and Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter. Her papers include general\n         correspondence, accounts, land records, miscellany and\n         materials from her term as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Warrenton, Va.\n         Her correspondence with John Augustine Chilton Keith\n         (1870-1915) relates primarily to the estate of Robert Taylor\n         Scott and includes two letters from John Singleton Mosby\n         (1833-1916) concerning restitution due RTS for tobacco\n         confiscated by the Union army in 1865. Land records mainly\n         concern tracts in Warrenton. Materials concerning Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott's presidency of the UDC chapter include\n         correspondence, copies of applications containing service\n         records and several biographical sketches of Robert Randolph,\n         one of the captains of the Black Horse Cavalry during the\n         Civil War.","John Scott (1845-1882), son of Robert Eden Scott and Ann\n         (Morson) Scott, was a lawyer in Baltimore, Maryland, and\n         California and items pertaining to him include diplomas,\n         certificates, a catalog of his law library and materials\n         concerning his death in California. There are also\n         miscellaneous materials for Sophia DeButts (Carter) Carter\n         (1841-1928), sister of Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott.","Robert Taylor Scott and Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott had\n         three children who lived to adulthood and two are represented\n         herein. Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928) was a lawyer and\n         judge in Richmond, VA. A University of Virginia graduate, he\n         worked in Norfolk for the Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia Air\n         Lines and the Exchange Bank of Virginia before coming to\n         Richmond in 1885 as Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue. He\n         entered the attorney-general's office in 1889 when his father\n         was elected to that post. He was appointed attorney-general in\n         1897 to serve out the remainder of his father's term and in\n         1904 was appointed by the General Assembly judge of the 10th\n         judicial circuit.","Most of the correspondence of Richard Carter Scott was\n         written to his father during his days in Norfolk and these\n         letters are arranged with his father's correspondence. Another\n         correspondent of RCS is William Wallace Scott (1845-1929),\n         author, state law librarian and secretary to the State\n         Democratic Committee from 1883-1892. Included in the\n         miscellaneous material is Richard Carter Scott's account of\n         the 1910 Episcopal Church Convention in Cincinnati.","Mary Welby (Scott) Keith's (1870-1958) materials include\n         correspondence primarily with her husband, John Augustine\n         Chilton Keith, certificates from the Virginia Female Institute\n         (Staunton, Va.), signed by Mrs. J. E. B. Stuart, and a\n         scrapbook. There are also two scrapbooks belonging to Alice\n         Dixon (Payne) Carr (1870-19676), kept in Warrenton.","Two children of Isham Keith and Sarah Agnes (Blackwell)\n         Keith, Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944) and Thomas Randolph\n         Keith (1872- ), are prominent in the collection. Materials\n         pertaining to Katherine Isham Keith include correspondence, a\n         scrapbook containing two letters from John Singleton Mosby and\n         one from James Keith, and genealogical materials. Harry Flood\n         Byrd (1887-1966), George Campbell Peery (1873-1952) and Robert\n         Walton Moore (1859-1941) are all correspondents. Thomas\n         Randolph Keith's correspondence primarily concerns\n         genealogy.","John Augustine Chilton Keith (b. 1907), sone of John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith and Mary Welby (Scott) Keith has\n         several items of correspondence in the collection. Among these\n         materials is a lengthy study of \"Gordonsdale,\" Fauquier\n         County, written by Reginald J. Vickers. The last box (14)\n         contains miscellaneous family materials, clippings,\n         genealogical notes on the Keith and Scott families and\n         information on Stuyvesant School, Warrenton, Va. Included in\n         the materials on Stuyvesant School is an essay written by John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith (1907- ), about the school and its\n         founder, Edwin Burrus King (1876-1950).","Chiefly correspondence and other\n         materials of Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) and his wife\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923). R. T. Scott was a\n         lawyer in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax counties, a\n         member of the constitutional convention of 1867 and the\n         Virginia General Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as\n         attorney-general of Virginia from 1889 to 1897. At the\n         beginning of the Civil War he organized a company of infantry\n         and served as captain of Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         C.S.A., until he was appointed to the staff of General George\n         Edward Pickett. His materials include extensive\n         correspondence, chiefly with his wife, both before and during\n         the Civil War, discussing family and personal matters, legal\n         education, admittance to the bar and practice of law, and the\n         impending conflict. War-time correspondence describes the\n         secession convention of 1861, general camp life, duties as\n         quartermaster, and Union activities in Fauquier County and\n         near Leesburg, Va. Also included are legal records and some\n         records for Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment. Records of\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott include general correspondence,\n         accounts, land records, miscellany, and materials from her\n         term as president of the Black Horse Chapter, United Daughters\n         of the Confederacy, at Warrenton, Va.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["Mss1 K2694 c FA2"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"collection_title_tesim":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"collection_ssim":["Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979"],"repository_ssm":["Virginia Historical Society"],"repository_ssim":["Virginia Historical Society"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Gift of Mrs. Fanny K. Day, Edison, N.J., Judge James\n            Keith, Fairfax, Va., John A. C. Keith, Fairfax, Va., and\n            Vice-Admiral R. Taylor Scott Keith, Coronado, Calif., 15\n            May 1985."],"access_subjects_ssim":["Confederate States of America. Army -- Military\n         life.","Confederate States of America. Army. Virginia\n         Infantry Regiment, 8th. Company K.","Keith family..","Lawyers -- Virginia -- Warrenton -- History --\n         19th century.","Scott family.","Scott, Fanny Scott Carter, 1838-1923.","Scott, Robert Taylor, 1834-1897.","Taylor family.","United Daughters of the Confederacy. Black Horse\n         Chapter (Warrenton, Va.).","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Virginia -- Politics and government -- 19th\n         century.","Warrenton (Va.) -- History.","Women -- Societies and clubs."],"access_subjects_ssm":["Confederate States of America. Army -- Military\n         life.","Confederate States of America. Army. Virginia\n         Infantry Regiment, 8th. Company K.","Keith family..","Lawyers -- Virginia -- Warrenton -- History --\n         19th century.","Scott family.","Scott, Fanny Scott Carter, 1838-1923.","Scott, Robert Taylor, 1834-1897.","Taylor family.","United Daughters of the Confederacy. Black Horse\n         Chapter (Warrenton, Va.).","Virginia -- History -- Civil War,\n         1861-1865.","Virginia -- Politics and government -- 19th\n         century.","Warrenton (Va.) -- History.","Women -- Societies and clubs."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["1,025 (ca.) items in 14 manuscript\n         boxes."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe papers of the Keith family is arranged into 25 series\n         by individual and further subdivided by material type where\n         necessary.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["The papers of the Keith family is arranged into 25 series\n         by individual and further subdivided by material type where\n         necessary."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection of Keith family papers consists of\n         materials from five generations of Keith, Scott and Carter\n         family members from Warrenton and surrounding Fauquier County.\n         Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) was a lawyer in Warrenton and\n         Prince William and Fairfax counties, a member of the\n         constitutional convention of 1867 and the Virginia General\n         Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as attorney-general of\n         Virginia from 1889 to 1897. His wife, Fanny Scott (Carter)\n         Scott (1838-1923), served as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, at Warrenton,\n         Va.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso represented in the collection are Robert I. Taylor\n         (1777?-1840), Mary Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?),\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott (1788-1862), Isham Keith\n         (1801-1863), Juliet (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), Anne Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862),\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886), Margaret Gordon\n         (Scott) Lee (1817-1866), Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880),\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), James\n         Keith (1839-1918), John Scott (1845-1882), Sophia DeButts\n         (Carter) Carter (1841-1928), Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928),\n         Mary Welby (Scott) Keith (1870-1958), Alice Dixon (Payne) Carr\n         (1870-1966), Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944), Thomas\n         Randolph Keith (b. 1872), and John Augustine Chilton Keith (b.\n         1907).\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["This collection of Keith family papers consists of\n         materials from five generations of Keith, Scott and Carter\n         family members from Warrenton and surrounding Fauquier County.\n         Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) was a lawyer in Warrenton and\n         Prince William and Fairfax counties, a member of the\n         constitutional convention of 1867 and the Virginia General\n         Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as attorney-general of\n         Virginia from 1889 to 1897. His wife, Fanny Scott (Carter)\n         Scott (1838-1923), served as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, at Warrenton,\n         Va.","Also represented in the collection are Robert I. Taylor\n         (1777?-1840), Mary Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?),\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott (1788-1862), Isham Keith\n         (1801-1863), Juliet (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), Anne Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862),\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886), Margaret Gordon\n         (Scott) Lee (1817-1866), Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880),\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), James\n         Keith (1839-1918), John Scott (1845-1882), Sophia DeButts\n         (Carter) Carter (1841-1928), Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928),\n         Mary Welby (Scott) Keith (1870-1958), Alice Dixon (Payne) Carr\n         (1870-1966), Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944), Thomas\n         Randolph Keith (b. 1872), and John Augustine Chilton Keith (b.\n         1907)."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eRobert I. Taylor (1777?-1840) was a prominent Alexandria\n         lawyer and president of the town's common council. His papers\n         contain several items of correspondence, estate materials and\n         materials concerning the guardianship of Richmond Marshall\n         Scott (b. 1829) by William Haywood Foote (1781?-1846),\n         executor of Richard Marshall Scott (d. 1833). The latter\n         includes a commonplace book kept by Foote. Taylor's wife, Mary\n         Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?) also has several letters\n         in the collection, as does Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott\n         (1788-1862), wife of Judge John Scott (1781-1850).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondence of Isham Keith (1801-1863), his wife, Juliet\n         (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), and her sister, Ann Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), is included herein. Isham\n         Keith was an influential Warrenton business man. Among his\n         correspondence is a letter to Judge John Scott and several\n         letters from a brother in Georgia, John Marshall Keith\n         (1788-1841), discussing the sale of a slave and state and\n         national politics.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Eden Scott (1808-1862), son of Judge John Scott and\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott, was recognized as one of\n         the state's leading Whigs in the years immediately prior to\n         the Civil War. His papers consist of correspondence, mostly\n         with his son, Robert Taylor Scott, and materials concerning\n         Sarah Scott (Ashton) Glassell. Robert Eden Scott's third wife,\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886) has several items\n         of correspondence in the collection, as does his sister,\n         Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (1817-1866). There is also a box\n         of estate materials for Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (box 2),\n         which contains accounts, vouchers, correspondence and reports\n         to the Fauquier County Court.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRichard Henry Carter (1817-1880) was a major in the 8th\n         Virginia Infantry during the Civil War. In 1879 he received an\n         appointment to the U. S. custom house in Panama and his\n         correspondence is largely with his son-in-law, Robert Taylor\n         Scott, during this period. One letter, dated 10 March 1880,\n         discusses national politics and American policies toward\n         Panama; however, much of his correspondence concerns a large\n         debt which was administered by RTS (see below). Carter's wife,\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), also has several\n         letters in the collection.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe Keith papers contain some correspondence of Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith,\n         and his wife Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), as\n         sell as a scrapbook belonging to her. A letter to Mrs. Keith\n         from Armistead Churchill Gordon (1855-1931) discusses family\n         history. James Keith, circuit judge and president of the\n         Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals from 1895 to 1916, was\n         another son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith. His\n         letters are largely with family members and deal with family\n         history. There is also an autograph album belonging to Judge\n         Keith from the 1859-1860 session as the University of\n         Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe major figure in the Keith family papers is Robert\n         Taylor Scott (1834-1897), attorney-general of Virginia from\n         1889 to 1897. Sone of Robert Eden Scott and Elizabeth (Taylor)\n         Scott, he was born on 10 March 1834 at Warrenton, Va. He\n         graduated from the University of Virginia in 1854 and was\n         admitted to the Warrenton bar in 1857. At the outbreak if the\n         Civil War, Scott organized a company of infantry which was\n         mustered into service as Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         under Colonel Eppa Hunton. RTS served as its captain until the\n         fall of 8162, when was appointed to the staff of General\n         George Edward Pickett as division quartermaster. He remained\n         on Pickett's staff until the end of the war.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Taylor Scott was a member of the constitutional\n         convention of 1867 and the Virginia General Assembly of\n         1881-1882, representing Fauquier and Loudoun counties. He was\n         elected attorney-general in 1889 and re-elected four years\n         later.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMaterials pertaining to Robert Taylor Scott include\n         correspondence, CSA materials, legal files, financial records,\n         a few items pertaining to his political career, copies of\n         speeches, clippings, miscellany and obituaries. Most of the\n         correspondence is between Scott and his wife, Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott, during the Civil War and the years immediately\n         before. These letters deal primarily with personal and family\n         matters, yet many contain information valuable to the\n         historical researcher as well. Much of the pre-war\n         correspondence concerns Scott's law activities; his education\n         and apprenticeship under his father, admittance to the bar,\n         and practice in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax\n         counties. Of particular interest are the letter of 31 December\n         1856, discussing a slave insurrection in Prince William\n         County; letter of 12 July 1860, concerning a runaway slave;\n         and letter of 3 January 1861, concerning the purchase or hire\n         of slaves. Other letters during this period deal with politics\n         and the impending conflict. The Civil War correspondence, from\n         1861 through November 1864, describes the secession convention\n         of 1861 (at which RTS was an observer and his father, RES, a\n         delegate), general camp life, Scott's duties as quartermaster,\n         Union activities in Fauquier and campaigns in which Scott was\n         involved. Scott's letters from Camp Johnston, near Leesburg,\n         dated 20 September 1861 to 1 October 1861 and from camp near\n         Centreville, dated 1 January 1862 to 5 March 1862, provide an\n         especially good picture of such facets of camp life as:\n         quarters and provisions, leaves and furloughs, religious\n         activities, health, morale and discipline. Other selected\n         letters are indexed following this description.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eScott's legal records include several miscellaneous files,\n         a copy of a partnership agreement with James Vass Brooke\n         (1824-1898) and records concerning his role as fiduciary for\n         Maria Louisa (Nelson) Carter, William Wesley Phillips,\n         Lawrence Ashton and John Quincy Marr. Marr was the first\n         Confederate soldier to be killed during the Civil War and\n         Robert Taylor Scott was administrator for his estate. Scott's\n         CSA service file contains orders, muster roles and\n         quartermaster's pay records for Company K, 8th Virginia\n         Regiment. Among Scott's financial records are materials\n         concerning the debt of Richard Henry Carter.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923) was the wife of\n         Robert Taylor Scott and the daughter of Richard Henry Carter\n         and Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter. Her papers include general\n         correspondence, accounts, land records, miscellany and\n         materials from her term as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Warrenton, Va.\n         Her correspondence with John Augustine Chilton Keith\n         (1870-1915) relates primarily to the estate of Robert Taylor\n         Scott and includes two letters from John Singleton Mosby\n         (1833-1916) concerning restitution due RTS for tobacco\n         confiscated by the Union army in 1865. Land records mainly\n         concern tracts in Warrenton. Materials concerning Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott's presidency of the UDC chapter include\n         correspondence, copies of applications containing service\n         records and several biographical sketches of Robert Randolph,\n         one of the captains of the Black Horse Cavalry during the\n         Civil War.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Scott (1845-1882), son of Robert Eden Scott and Ann\n         (Morson) Scott, was a lawyer in Baltimore, Maryland, and\n         California and items pertaining to him include diplomas,\n         certificates, a catalog of his law library and materials\n         concerning his death in California. There are also\n         miscellaneous materials for Sophia DeButts (Carter) Carter\n         (1841-1928), sister of Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eRobert Taylor Scott and Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott had\n         three children who lived to adulthood and two are represented\n         herein. Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928) was a lawyer and\n         judge in Richmond, VA. A University of Virginia graduate, he\n         worked in Norfolk for the Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia Air\n         Lines and the Exchange Bank of Virginia before coming to\n         Richmond in 1885 as Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue. He\n         entered the attorney-general's office in 1889 when his father\n         was elected to that post. He was appointed attorney-general in\n         1897 to serve out the remainder of his father's term and in\n         1904 was appointed by the General Assembly judge of the 10th\n         judicial circuit.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMost of the correspondence of Richard Carter Scott was\n         written to his father during his days in Norfolk and these\n         letters are arranged with his father's correspondence. Another\n         correspondent of RCS is William Wallace Scott (1845-1929),\n         author, state law librarian and secretary to the State\n         Democratic Committee from 1883-1892. Included in the\n         miscellaneous material is Richard Carter Scott's account of\n         the 1910 Episcopal Church Convention in Cincinnati.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMary Welby (Scott) Keith's (1870-1958) materials include\n         correspondence primarily with her husband, John Augustine\n         Chilton Keith, certificates from the Virginia Female Institute\n         (Staunton, Va.), signed by Mrs. J. E. B. Stuart, and a\n         scrapbook. There are also two scrapbooks belonging to Alice\n         Dixon (Payne) Carr (1870-19676), kept in Warrenton.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTwo children of Isham Keith and Sarah Agnes (Blackwell)\n         Keith, Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944) and Thomas Randolph\n         Keith (1872- ), are prominent in the collection. Materials\n         pertaining to Katherine Isham Keith include correspondence, a\n         scrapbook containing two letters from John Singleton Mosby and\n         one from James Keith, and genealogical materials. Harry Flood\n         Byrd (1887-1966), George Campbell Peery (1873-1952) and Robert\n         Walton Moore (1859-1941) are all correspondents. Thomas\n         Randolph Keith's correspondence primarily concerns\n         genealogy.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eJohn Augustine Chilton Keith (b. 1907), sone of John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith and Mary Welby (Scott) Keith has\n         several items of correspondence in the collection. Among these\n         materials is a lengthy study of \"Gordonsdale,\" Fauquier\n         County, written by Reginald J. Vickers. The last box (14)\n         contains miscellaneous family materials, clippings,\n         genealogical notes on the Keith and Scott families and\n         information on Stuyvesant School, Warrenton, Va. Included in\n         the materials on Stuyvesant School is an essay written by John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith (1907- ), about the school and its\n         founder, Edwin Burrus King (1876-1950).\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["Robert I. Taylor (1777?-1840) was a prominent Alexandria\n         lawyer and president of the town's common council. His papers\n         contain several items of correspondence, estate materials and\n         materials concerning the guardianship of Richmond Marshall\n         Scott (b. 1829) by William Haywood Foote (1781?-1846),\n         executor of Richard Marshall Scott (d. 1833). The latter\n         includes a commonplace book kept by Foote. Taylor's wife, Mary\n         Elizabeth (Berry) Taylor (d. 1863?) also has several letters\n         in the collection, as does Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott\n         (1788-1862), wife of Judge John Scott (1781-1850).","Correspondence of Isham Keith (1801-1863), his wife, Juliet\n         (Chilton) Keith (1800-1887), and her sister, Ann Smith\n         (Chilton) Johnston (1810-1893), is included herein. Isham\n         Keith was an influential Warrenton business man. Among his\n         correspondence is a letter to Judge John Scott and several\n         letters from a brother in Georgia, John Marshall Keith\n         (1788-1841), discussing the sale of a slave and state and\n         national politics.","Robert Eden Scott (1808-1862), son of Judge John Scott and\n         Elizabeth Blackwell (Pickett) Scott, was recognized as one of\n         the state's leading Whigs in the years immediately prior to\n         the Civil War. His papers consist of correspondence, mostly\n         with his son, Robert Taylor Scott, and materials concerning\n         Sarah Scott (Ashton) Glassell. Robert Eden Scott's third wife,\n         Heningham Watkins (Lyons) Scott (1827-1886) has several items\n         of correspondence in the collection, as does his sister,\n         Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (1817-1866). There is also a box\n         of estate materials for Margaret Gordon (Scott) Lee (box 2),\n         which contains accounts, vouchers, correspondence and reports\n         to the Fauquier County Court.","Richard Henry Carter (1817-1880) was a major in the 8th\n         Virginia Infantry during the Civil War. In 1879 he received an\n         appointment to the U. S. custom house in Panama and his\n         correspondence is largely with his son-in-law, Robert Taylor\n         Scott, during this period. One letter, dated 10 March 1880,\n         discusses national politics and American policies toward\n         Panama; however, much of his correspondence concerns a large\n         debt which was administered by RTS (see below). Carter's wife,\n         Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter (1819-1885), also has several\n         letters in the collection.","The Keith papers contain some correspondence of Isham Keith\n         (1833-1902), son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith,\n         and his wife Sarah Agnes (Blackwell) Keith (1837-1912), as\n         sell as a scrapbook belonging to her. A letter to Mrs. Keith\n         from Armistead Churchill Gordon (1855-1931) discusses family\n         history. James Keith, circuit judge and president of the\n         Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals from 1895 to 1916, was\n         another son of Isham Keith and Juliet (Chilton) Keith. His\n         letters are largely with family members and deal with family\n         history. There is also an autograph album belonging to Judge\n         Keith from the 1859-1860 session as the University of\n         Virginia.","The major figure in the Keith family papers is Robert\n         Taylor Scott (1834-1897), attorney-general of Virginia from\n         1889 to 1897. Sone of Robert Eden Scott and Elizabeth (Taylor)\n         Scott, he was born on 10 March 1834 at Warrenton, Va. He\n         graduated from the University of Virginia in 1854 and was\n         admitted to the Warrenton bar in 1857. At the outbreak if the\n         Civil War, Scott organized a company of infantry which was\n         mustered into service as Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         under Colonel Eppa Hunton. RTS served as its captain until the\n         fall of 8162, when was appointed to the staff of General\n         George Edward Pickett as division quartermaster. He remained\n         on Pickett's staff until the end of the war.","Robert Taylor Scott was a member of the constitutional\n         convention of 1867 and the Virginia General Assembly of\n         1881-1882, representing Fauquier and Loudoun counties. He was\n         elected attorney-general in 1889 and re-elected four years\n         later.","Materials pertaining to Robert Taylor Scott include\n         correspondence, CSA materials, legal files, financial records,\n         a few items pertaining to his political career, copies of\n         speeches, clippings, miscellany and obituaries. Most of the\n         correspondence is between Scott and his wife, Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott, during the Civil War and the years immediately\n         before. These letters deal primarily with personal and family\n         matters, yet many contain information valuable to the\n         historical researcher as well. Much of the pre-war\n         correspondence concerns Scott's law activities; his education\n         and apprenticeship under his father, admittance to the bar,\n         and practice in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax\n         counties. Of particular interest are the letter of 31 December\n         1856, discussing a slave insurrection in Prince William\n         County; letter of 12 July 1860, concerning a runaway slave;\n         and letter of 3 January 1861, concerning the purchase or hire\n         of slaves. Other letters during this period deal with politics\n         and the impending conflict. The Civil War correspondence, from\n         1861 through November 1864, describes the secession convention\n         of 1861 (at which RTS was an observer and his father, RES, a\n         delegate), general camp life, Scott's duties as quartermaster,\n         Union activities in Fauquier and campaigns in which Scott was\n         involved. Scott's letters from Camp Johnston, near Leesburg,\n         dated 20 September 1861 to 1 October 1861 and from camp near\n         Centreville, dated 1 January 1862 to 5 March 1862, provide an\n         especially good picture of such facets of camp life as:\n         quarters and provisions, leaves and furloughs, religious\n         activities, health, morale and discipline. Other selected\n         letters are indexed following this description.","Scott's legal records include several miscellaneous files,\n         a copy of a partnership agreement with James Vass Brooke\n         (1824-1898) and records concerning his role as fiduciary for\n         Maria Louisa (Nelson) Carter, William Wesley Phillips,\n         Lawrence Ashton and John Quincy Marr. Marr was the first\n         Confederate soldier to be killed during the Civil War and\n         Robert Taylor Scott was administrator for his estate. Scott's\n         CSA service file contains orders, muster roles and\n         quartermaster's pay records for Company K, 8th Virginia\n         Regiment. Among Scott's financial records are materials\n         concerning the debt of Richard Henry Carter.","Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923) was the wife of\n         Robert Taylor Scott and the daughter of Richard Henry Carter\n         and Mary Welby (DeButts) Carter. Her papers include general\n         correspondence, accounts, land records, miscellany and\n         materials from her term as president of the Black Horse\n         Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Warrenton, Va.\n         Her correspondence with John Augustine Chilton Keith\n         (1870-1915) relates primarily to the estate of Robert Taylor\n         Scott and includes two letters from John Singleton Mosby\n         (1833-1916) concerning restitution due RTS for tobacco\n         confiscated by the Union army in 1865. Land records mainly\n         concern tracts in Warrenton. Materials concerning Fanny Scott\n         (Carter) Scott's presidency of the UDC chapter include\n         correspondence, copies of applications containing service\n         records and several biographical sketches of Robert Randolph,\n         one of the captains of the Black Horse Cavalry during the\n         Civil War.","John Scott (1845-1882), son of Robert Eden Scott and Ann\n         (Morson) Scott, was a lawyer in Baltimore, Maryland, and\n         California and items pertaining to him include diplomas,\n         certificates, a catalog of his law library and materials\n         concerning his death in California. There are also\n         miscellaneous materials for Sophia DeButts (Carter) Carter\n         (1841-1928), sister of Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott.","Robert Taylor Scott and Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott had\n         three children who lived to adulthood and two are represented\n         herein. Richard Carter Scott (1859-1928) was a lawyer and\n         judge in Richmond, VA. A University of Virginia graduate, he\n         worked in Norfolk for the Virginia, Tennessee and Georgia Air\n         Lines and the Exchange Bank of Virginia before coming to\n         Richmond in 1885 as Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue. He\n         entered the attorney-general's office in 1889 when his father\n         was elected to that post. He was appointed attorney-general in\n         1897 to serve out the remainder of his father's term and in\n         1904 was appointed by the General Assembly judge of the 10th\n         judicial circuit.","Most of the correspondence of Richard Carter Scott was\n         written to his father during his days in Norfolk and these\n         letters are arranged with his father's correspondence. Another\n         correspondent of RCS is William Wallace Scott (1845-1929),\n         author, state law librarian and secretary to the State\n         Democratic Committee from 1883-1892. Included in the\n         miscellaneous material is Richard Carter Scott's account of\n         the 1910 Episcopal Church Convention in Cincinnati.","Mary Welby (Scott) Keith's (1870-1958) materials include\n         correspondence primarily with her husband, John Augustine\n         Chilton Keith, certificates from the Virginia Female Institute\n         (Staunton, Va.), signed by Mrs. J. E. B. Stuart, and a\n         scrapbook. There are also two scrapbooks belonging to Alice\n         Dixon (Payne) Carr (1870-19676), kept in Warrenton.","Two children of Isham Keith and Sarah Agnes (Blackwell)\n         Keith, Katherine Isham Keith (1865-1944) and Thomas Randolph\n         Keith (1872- ), are prominent in the collection. Materials\n         pertaining to Katherine Isham Keith include correspondence, a\n         scrapbook containing two letters from John Singleton Mosby and\n         one from James Keith, and genealogical materials. Harry Flood\n         Byrd (1887-1966), George Campbell Peery (1873-1952) and Robert\n         Walton Moore (1859-1941) are all correspondents. Thomas\n         Randolph Keith's correspondence primarily concerns\n         genealogy.","John Augustine Chilton Keith (b. 1907), sone of John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith and Mary Welby (Scott) Keith has\n         several items of correspondence in the collection. Among these\n         materials is a lengthy study of \"Gordonsdale,\" Fauquier\n         County, written by Reginald J. Vickers. The last box (14)\n         contains miscellaneous family materials, clippings,\n         genealogical notes on the Keith and Scott families and\n         information on Stuyvesant School, Warrenton, Va. Included in\n         the materials on Stuyvesant School is an essay written by John\n         Augustine Chilton Keith (1907- ), about the school and its\n         founder, Edwin Burrus King (1876-1950)."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eChiefly correspondence and other\n         materials of Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) and his wife\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923). R. T. Scott was a\n         lawyer in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax counties, a\n         member of the constitutional convention of 1867 and the\n         Virginia General Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as\n         attorney-general of Virginia from 1889 to 1897. At the\n         beginning of the Civil War he organized a company of infantry\n         and served as captain of Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         C.S.A., until he was appointed to the staff of General George\n         Edward Pickett. His materials include extensive\n         correspondence, chiefly with his wife, both before and during\n         the Civil War, discussing family and personal matters, legal\n         education, admittance to the bar and practice of law, and the\n         impending conflict. War-time correspondence describes the\n         secession convention of 1861, general camp life, duties as\n         quartermaster, and Union activities in Fauquier County and\n         near Leesburg, Va. Also included are legal records and some\n         records for Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment. Records of\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott include general correspondence,\n         accounts, land records, miscellany, and materials from her\n         term as president of the Black Horse Chapter, United Daughters\n         of the Confederacy, at Warrenton, Va.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["Chiefly correspondence and other\n         materials of Robert Taylor Scott (1834-1897) and his wife\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott (1838-1923). R. T. Scott was a\n         lawyer in Warrenton and Prince William and Fairfax counties, a\n         member of the constitutional convention of 1867 and the\n         Virginia General Assembly of 1881-1882, and served as\n         attorney-general of Virginia from 1889 to 1897. At the\n         beginning of the Civil War he organized a company of infantry\n         and served as captain of Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment,\n         C.S.A., until he was appointed to the staff of General George\n         Edward Pickett. His materials include extensive\n         correspondence, chiefly with his wife, both before and during\n         the Civil War, discussing family and personal matters, legal\n         education, admittance to the bar and practice of law, and the\n         impending conflict. War-time correspondence describes the\n         secession convention of 1861, general camp life, duties as\n         quartermaster, and Union activities in Fauquier County and\n         near Leesburg, Va. Also included are legal records and some\n         records for Company K, Eighth Virginia Regiment. Records of\n         Fanny Scott (Carter) Scott include general correspondence,\n         accounts, land records, miscellany, and materials from her\n         term as president of the Black Horse Chapter, United Daughters\n         of the Confederacy, at Warrenton, Va."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":29,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:36:38.951Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vihi_vih00011"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Virginia Historical Society","value":"Virginia Historical Society","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=United+Daughters+of+the+Confederacy.+Black+Horse%0A+++++++++Chapter+%28Warrenton%2C+Va.%29.\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Virginia+Historical+Society"}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/repository_ssim.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=United+Daughters+of+the+Confederacy.+Black+Horse%0A+++++++++Chapter+%28Warrenton%2C+Va.%29."}},{"type":"facet","id":"collection_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Collection","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979","value":"Keith Family Papers, \n          \n         1830-1979","hits":1},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=United+Daughters+of+the+Confederacy.+Black+Horse%0A+++++++++Chapter+%28Warrenton%2C+Va.%29.\u0026f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Keith+Family+Papers%2C+%0A++++++++++%0A+++++++++1830-1979"}}]},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/collection_ssim.json?f%5Baccess_subjects%5D%5B%5D=United+Daughters+of+the+Confederacy.+Black+Horse%0A+++++++++Chapter+%28Warrenton%2C+Va.%29."}},{"type":"facet","id":"access_subjects_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Subjects","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Confederate States of America. 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